View Source Ash.Query.Operator behaviour (ash v2.19.3)
An operator is a predicate with a left
and a right
For more information on being a predicate, see Ash.Filter.Predicate
. Most of the complexities
are there. An operator must meet both behaviours.
Summary
Callbacks
Evaluates the operator in Elixir
If true
, will be allowed to evaluate nil
inputs.
Create a new predicate. There are various return types possible
The implementation of the inspect protocol.
The types accepted by the operator. Defaults to [:same, :any]
, which is any values of the same type.
Functions
Evaluate the operator with provided inputs
Create a new operator. Pass the module and the left and right values
Get type overloads for the given operator
Callbacks
Evaluates the operator in Elixir
@callback evaluate_nil_inputs?() :: boolean()
If true
, will be allowed to evaluate nil
inputs.
If false
(the default), any nil
inputs will cause a nil
return.
@callback new(term(), term()) :: {:ok, term(), term()} | {:ok, term()} | {:known, boolean()} | {:error, term()}
Create a new predicate. There are various return types possible:
{:ok, left, right}
- Return the left/right values of the operator{:ok, operator}
- Return the operator itself, this or the one above are acceptable{:known, boolean}
- If the value is already known, e.g1 == 1
{:error, error}
- If there was an error creating the operator
@callback predicate?() :: boolean()
@callback to_string( struct(), Inspect.Opts.t() ) :: term()
The implementation of the inspect protocol.
If not defined, it will be inferred
@callback types() :: [ :any | :same | [Ash.Type.t() | {Ash.Type.t(), constraints :: Keyword.t()}] ]
The types accepted by the operator. Defaults to [:same, :any]
, which is any values of the same type.
Functions
Evaluate the operator with provided inputs
Create a new operator. Pass the module and the left and right values
Get type overloads for the given operator